Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Bad AI Maps - Part 2

I’ve been going deeper into the AI map rabbit hole. Here are a few more maps. The first two are from an image generating site called Craiyon. The prompt for this first map is World map with good countries in green and bad countries in red. 


While trying to generate my own map Craiyon suggested this US map highlighting 20 Ab InBev breweries, with St. Louis and New York marked. There’s well over 20 “AB” symbols on this map but you might spot a few other inaccuracies here.


Starryai is another image generator. This shows up as one of their featured maps and is a very strange mashup of history, highly altered geography and hallucinated text.


The geography bears little relation to Gettysburg, the battle information is dubious at best and most items on the legend are not on the map. Even as a fantasy map it doesn’t work well because much of the text is unreadable.

A post on Medium shows how bad a job Midjourney, a popular image generator is at creating a map of Ontario. The geographic similarity is none.


I’ve previously heard rave reviews of Midjourney’s ability to create fantasy maps. That influence is pretty clear in the above attempt. Clearly it is a lot better at fantasy than reality.

Here is one supposedly created by Gemini proving that White Europeans are in fact Caucasians.


-via Reddit

Finally, here is another Crayon creation. This one shows the national dish of each country with flags representing some interesting territorial claims. Some of the far eastern countries are left hanging, off the edge of the planet.


In a future post I will show some of my own attempts at using these generators.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Bad AI Maps - Part 1

This map has been making the rounds on social media lately.


I’m not sure where it originated. The Reddit post shows a Twitter (X) site for a travel concierge, but I’ve seen this in other places too. From showing a north-south route as east-west to the duplicate Hamburgs this one is full of AI “hallucinations”. Seeing this prompted more of a deep dive into what other crappy AI generated maps are out there.

It turns out that this fall Brilliant Maps did their own post on this. Most of these maps are from the chatgptlunatics Twitter and have a similar look, either a map of US States or European countries with prompts like this one.


These maps are full of unfinished or poorly spelled words. Or just weirdly generated ones as seen in Utah and Tennessee above. Here is a European example.


Gears? Dysies? I like that the common cause of death in Austria is “Austra”. The unreadable text for Portugal and Greece seems to be a common feature of these images. 

Here’s a few more I found. 


This one is from Facebook. The ones that point (even London) point to the wrong places. Others have no point. From this map I’ve learned that Rome (in France) gets slightly more visitors than “Rom”, in Spain. Also, there are some strange boundaries and merged countries in central Europe around the fake Istanbul. 

Here’s an interesting weather map of an extra elongated Nova Scotia with some duplicated cities, via LinkedIn.


The strangest one I found was generated from Freepik. For a future post I created my own account to see what I could generate, but here is one where another user’s prompt was A map of a map that says mellow. Granted the prompt is absurd, but the results are kind of wild. Does the world need an extra Texas and Louisiana? I tried to use a language detector to make sense of these words but very few of them were recognized. The ones that were ranged from Gaelic to Indonesian. Anyway enjoy the randomness.


 

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Iran's Many Ethnicities

With all that is going on in Iran, it may be useful or at least interesting to see a map of the country’s ethnic diversity. As with many other countries, it is easy to think of today’s boundaries as reflecting homogeneous regions. This map shows a much more complicated picture. 

-CIA map via the University of Texas Map Library.

According to Wikipedia, Persians, often considered identical to Iranians only make up 51% of the population. Azeri’s (from Azerbaijan) make up 24% and are represented in purple above. Two of the northern provinces are named East and West Azerbaijan and there is speculation that should Iran’s government fall, Azerbaijan might look to grab these provinces. There is also a significant Kurdish presence in this and other regions. Also in the north are some significant minorities along the Caspian Sea coast such as Gilakis and Mazandaranis, whose populations make up 8% of the country’s ethnic breakdown. Less numerous but covering much more land are the Baloch, mainly based in neighboring Pakistan with a significant separatist movement in both countries.

Other significant minorities include Turkmen (on the border of Turkmenistan and whose color is hard to distinguish from the Talysh on the opposite side of the Caspian Sea), Lurs, and Arabs. It is also interesting to see how much area is “sparsely populated”.

The map also indicates many Sunni Muslims in the outermost regions of the country though according to Wikipedia they only make up 5-10% of the population.